Get to Know the 3 Top 100 Courses in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

When the Bing Crosby Pro-Am moved from Rancho Sante Fe Golf Club in San Diego County to the Monterey Peninsula in 1947, it became the first PGA TOUR event played on multiple courses.

Crosby, a Cypress Point Club member, insisted that the golf was too great in Pebble Beach to be limited to just one course. So the first round would be played at Cypress Point Club, the second round on the Dunes Course at Monterey Peninsula Country Club, and the final round at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

The event eventually became a 72-hole format with a cut after three rounds. It has been hosted at every course in Pebble Beach except for The Links at Spanish Bay. Since 2010, the rotation includes a round each at Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course and the Shore Course at MPCC, with the final round after a 54-hole cut returning to Pebble Beach.

The unique setup of what is now called the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am favors familiarity. Mark O’Meara won a tournament-record five times, while Phil Mickelson has captured four titles (and finished one stroke shy of tying O’Meara’s mark last year). Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller each won three AT&Ts, while Davis Love III, Dustin Johnson and Brandt Snedeker have all won twice since 2000.

Pebble Beach (6,816 Yards, Par-72)

Harry How/Getty Images

The tournament’s host since 1947, only one PGA TOUR event has been staged at the same venue longer – The Masters (1934) at Augusta National.

The major championship pedigree of Pebble Beach dates back even further to the 1929 U.S. Amateur. Pebble Beach will host its sixth U.S. Open in 2019 (plus a seventh in 2027), its fifth U.S. Amateur in August, and has also staged two U.S. Women’s Amateurs and the 1977 PGA Championship. Pebble Beach even hosted the 2nd Annual Nabisco Golf Championships in 1988 – an event that became the TOUR Championship in 1991. The U.S. Women’s Open also visits Pebble Beach for the first time in 2023.

Pebble Beach is ranked America’s No. 1 public course by every major golf publication. The four most iconic holes are No. 7 (shortest in U.S. Open history), No. 8 (Nicklaus’ favorite par-4 in golf), No. 17 (site of two U.S. Open clinching shots: Nicklaus’ 1-iron in 1972 and Tom Watson’s chip-in in 1982) and No. 18 (one of the most famous finishing holes in golf).

Pebble Beach is the shortest course on the PGA TOUR (second is TPC River Highlands, a 6,841-yard, par-70 layout). In its defense, Pebble Beach also has the smallest greens on the PGA TOUR (protected by 117 bunkers), averaging just 3,500 square feet. To put that into perspective, you could fit almost four Pebble Beach greens into the average St Andrews green. (And St Andrews also has five fewer bunkers.)

Spyglass Hill (6,953 Yards, Par-72)

Spyglass Hill opened in 1966 and moved straight into the Crosby rotation a year later, replacing the Shore Course at MPCC.

Spyglass Hill will co-host the U.S. Amateur for the second time in August. In 1999, no one in the 312-player field broke 70 during medal play, and the scoring average was nearly 80.

The term “Tiger Tees” was first used to describe the back tees at Spyglass Hill in a 1967 AP article. The par-5s were also “murder” in that same story. The uphill, sidewinding course in damp marine air plays much longer than its yardage, but it measures as the fourth-shortest layout on the PGA TOUR.

The course record sat at 8-under 64 until Phil Mickelson (2005) and Luke Donald (2006) shot 10-under 62s in back-to-back years. Said Northern California native Kevin Sutherland when he heard about Mickelson’s round, “A 62 is good at Bermuda Dunes. A 62 at Spyglass is a whole different story. That’s an amazing round.”

MPCC Shore Course (6,867 Yards, Par-71)

Marc Howard for Monterey Peninsula Foundation

The only private club currently in the rota has two courses, and both have been a part of the Bing Crosby Pro-Am. The Dunes Course hosted for 18 consecutive years beginning in 1947, and the Shore Course had spot-starts in 1965, 1966 and 1977. The Shore Course returned to the rotation in 2010, replacing Poppy Hills.

Mike Strantz completed a renovation and a rebirth of the Shore Course in 2004. The course was most dramatically transformed from Nos. 5-15, an incredible 11-hole shoreline stretch overlooking 17-Mile Drive. Golf Digest slotted it No. 65 in its 100 Greatest Golf Courses ranking. Strantz said while designing it, “I dreamed that the course would appear to dance among the cypress trees on this coastline forever.”

The Dunes Course just completed a rebuild in 2016 by Tom Fazio. While not currently part of the AT&T rotation, Golf.com says The Dunes Course, coupled with The Shore Course, makes MPCC “the best 36-hole club in America.”

MPCC provides the most opportunities to go low. A par-72 layout for members, the tournament setup is a par-71 with four par-5s (No. 1 is converted into a par-4). South Korean Sung Kang shot a course-record 11-under 60 in 2016 (he needed a birdie on the last hole to shoot 59). The Shore Course is the third shortest on the PGA TOUR, giving the AT&T three of the four shortest layouts the pros play all year.

The Shore Course borders Spyglass Hill. From the sixth tee box at Spyglass Hill, you can see the 13th green on the Shore Course. It’s just a short hike down 17-Mile Drive to watch play at both courses. The Dunes Course bumps up against both the Shore Course and Spanish Bay. The ninth holes at the Dunes Course and Spanish Bay are separated by a giant dune.

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